To start, BattleForTheNet.com, a virtual meeting ground that’s been put together by free internet advocacy groups and nonprofits, is reporting a surge in the number of phone calls that it’s helped direct to Congress. Almost 400,000 calls have been made this week, according to the website, with 270,000 of those coming in the last 24 hours alone.

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau this week said he was “very concerned” about the plan in an interview with Motherboard. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman published a letter of his own on Medium where he claims the FCC dismissed concerns raised by an investigation he ran that found that the public comment process “was being corrupted by the submission of enormous numbers of fake comments concerning the possible repeal of net neutrality rules.”

Politicians, Silicon Valley, and small businesses are speaking out with the public

Elected representatives are speaking out, too. Tulsi Gabbard, a Congresswoman in Hawaii, released a statement accusing Pai of “rewarding pay-to-play politics.” California senator Kamala Harris is collecting signatures in support of the existing rules in her own state.

And last evening, Jessica Rosenworcel, who currently serves on the FCC, published an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times titled “I’m on the FCC. Please stop us from killing net neutrality.”

“It’s a lousy idea. And it deserves a heated response from the millions of Americans who work and create online every day,” Rosenworcel wrote. She went on to argue that, despite the major effort that Americans have already put in over the last few years fighting for a free and open internet, this new challenge needs to be met with the same fervor. “I think the FCC needs to work for the public, and therefore that this proposal needs to be slowed down and eventually stopped. In the time before the agency votes, anyone who agrees should do something old-fashioned: Make a ruckus.”